Finally, here it is. This time I got straight down on the Lythronax and drew it. This is the new tyrannosauroid that everyone loves and is the real closest ancestor of Tyrannosaurus. Lythronax argestes (king of gore from the south) is a 7.3 meter (24 foot) long, 2.5 tone (5,500 lb) theropod from North America. Its fossils hail from Utah's Wahweap Formation, Campanian Stage of the the Late Cretaceous, 80.6 to 79.9 million years ago.

It shows the first signs of the T. rex's bone-crushing teeth and jaws.

Lythronax was the apex predator of its environment, no doubt, and it preyed on the likes of Diabloceratops and Acristavus.

So the carcass here?

God knows what the hell that dead dinosaur is, but it sure is attractive to scavengers.

Not only is the theropod here, but also a waterbird and some orange albanerpetonid amphibians have arrived to eat some scraps before moving on. There are in fact numerous birds in the pic here. Which is not surprising, considering that they were here for a long time. They are advanced waterfowl, looking a bit like European common coots if naught else. Plus spot some crane-like alvarezsaurs if you can in the distance. There is one large glossy black and red alvarezsaur on a mudflat.

And butterflies are a must cliche in a Vasika Udurawane work.

P.S. I am a little bored with dinosaurs now. Will be taking a slight sabbatical. And this is possible my last dinosaur in a wetland.

Also the catlike effect keeps the dinosaur lean and mean like...well, a big cat lol, and it works with pointillism which works incredibly well with feathers but is a pain in the ass with scales...whew...